tease ●●●●○
tease /tiːz/ verb
tease noun [countable]
اذیت کردن، مسخره کردن
آزار دادن، اذیت کردن، کسی را دست انداختن، سخنان نیشدار گفتن، اذیت، پوش دادن مو
▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼
Synonyms & Related Words tease[verb]Synonyms: mock, goad, lead on, provoke, pull someone's leg
(informal), tantalize, taunt, torment
Related Idioms: give a bad time
Related Words: disturb,
importune
English Thesaurus: tease, make fun of somebody/something, taunt, pull sb’s leg, wind somebody up, ... [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English Dictionary I. tease1 /tiːz/
verb[
Language: Old English;
Origin: tæsan]
1. LAUGH [intransitive and transitive] to laugh at someone and make jokes in order to have fun by embarrassing them, either in a friendly way or in an unkind way:
Don’t get upset. I was only teasing. He used to tease her mercilessly.tease somebody about something She used to tease me about my hair.REGISTERIn everyday English, people often say
make fun of rather than
tease:
Stop making fun of me!2. ANNOY AN ANIMAL [transitive] to deliberately annoy an animal:
Stop teasing the cat!3. SEX [intransitive and transitive] to deliberately make someone sexually excited without intending to have sex with them, in a way that seems unkind
4. HAIR [transitive] American English to comb your hair in the opposite direction to which it grows, so that it looks thicker
Synonym : backcomb British English [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. tease2 noun [countable] informal1. someone who enjoys making jokes at people, and embarrassing them, especially in a friendly way:
Don’t take any notice of Joe – he’s a big tease.2. something that you say or do as a joke, to tease someone:
I’m sorry, it was only a tease.3. someone who deliberately makes you sexually excited, but has no intention of having sex with you
[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Collocations tease verb ADV. mercilessly | a little, gently, lightly VERB + TEASE used to PREP. about His friends used to tease him about his tatty clothes.
with They teased her mercilessly with remarks about her weight. PHRASES be just/only teasing Don't get upset, I was only teasing. [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
Thesaurus tease to laugh at someone and make jokes in order to have fun by embarrassing them, either in a friendly way or in an unkind way. In everyday English, people often say
make fun of rather than
tease:
At work, we all tease her because she’s always late. Sam’s sisters used to tease him because he was overweight.make fun of somebody/something to tease someone, especially in an unkind way, by laughing at something they do and making them seem stupid:
The boys at school used to make fun of me and call me names. Everyone made fun of the way our Maths teacher walked.taunt /tɔːnt tɔːnt/ to tease someone in a very unpleasant way that shows you do not respect them, in order to make them angry or upset:
In the end he hit the man for taunting him about his wife. The other prisoners taunted him until he couldn’t bear it any more.pull sb’s leg informal to tease someone in a friendly way, by trying to make them think something is true when it is not:
I’m not really 18. I was only pulling your leg. I don’t believe you! You’re pulling my leg!wind somebody up British English informal to deliberately say something to someone, in order to see if they become annoyed or worried:
Are you trying to wind me up? My friends are always winding me up about it.take the mickey (out of somebody) British English informal to make someone look silly, often in a friendly way, for example by copying them or saying something that you do not really mean about them:
I don’t speak like that – stop taking the mickey! ‘You’re a genius, we all know that!’ ‘Are you taking the mickey out of me?’comment something that you say or write in order to give your opinion:
Does anyone have any comments? Readers are invited to send in their comments and suggestions.remark something that you say:
Just ignore them if they start making rude remarks. I’m not sure what he meant by that last remark.point something that someone mentions about a subject in a discussion, argument, article etc:
That’s an interesting point, Steve. He raises (=mentions) a number of important points in his paper.observation a comment in which you say what you think or have noticed about something:
Karl Marx made the observation that history repeats itself first as tragedy, second as farce.aside a comment made in a low voice, that you intend only certain people to hear:
‘Is that true?’, she whispered in an aside to Don.quip /kwɪp/ a clever and amusing comment:
She knew she should reply with some light-hearted quip.dig informal a comment you make to annoy or criticize someone:
I’m tired of her little digs at me. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲